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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 259, Issue 1, 141-147, Jan, 1984
JE Hooper and RB Kelley
Calmodulin is a major nerve terminal protein and a potential mediator of
calcium-dependent nerve terminal functions. Calcium-dependent calmodulin
binding has been reported in secretory membrane preparations including
chromaffin granules and crude rat brain vesicles. Here we demonstrate a
calcium-dependent calmodulin-binding site on cholinergic synaptic vesicles
from electric organ. It is saturable with high affinity (KD = 10 nM; Bmax =
80 pmol/mg). The binding is inhibited by trifluoperazine (I50 = 8 microM)
and is at least 1000-fold specific for calmodulin over troponin C.
Association and dissociation rates (k = 3.1 X 10(6) M-1S-1; k-1 = 1.3 X
10(-2) S-1) are consistent with the dissociation constant measured at
equilibrium. Intact synaptic vesicles bind to calmodulin immobilized on
polyacrylamide matrix, suggesting that the binding site is cytoplasmically
oriented in the vesicle population. Intact synaptic vesicles bind
calmodulin up to 80-fold more effectively than do side fractions from the
vesicle purification. The quantitative difference is largely due to latency
of binding sites since it disappears when the binding is assayed in
detergent. Binding of calmodulin to proteins separated by sodium dodecyl
sulfate- polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis shows that a subset of nerve
terminal and electric organ calmodulin-binding proteins are found in
synaptic vesicles.
Calcium-dependent calmodulin binding to cholinergic synaptic vesicles
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